But Beautiful by Geoff Dyer: Subtitled “a book about jazz” this book is a re-imagining of the lives of 8 great jazz musicians of the 1950s. In 1992, The title was selected as a winner of the Somerset Maugham Award for authors under 35. Publishers Weekly said: “The colorful essays are sometimes excessively fanciful, and they capture the atmosphere of alienation that surrounded these men who … seemed to function only when making music.”
Coming Through Slaughter by Michael Ondaatje: More fictionalizing of real lives, this time that of Buddy Bolden, a New Orleans ragtime trumpeter who became afflicted by a psychological ailment at the height of his career and was confined to an asylum. Ondaantje’s novel is considered a challenge by many readers – it’s writing style following the reputation of the music is portrays: experimental, jarring but beautiful and to one person genius and to another incomprehensible.
Oh Play That Thing by Roddy Doyle: The second volume of Doyle’s Last Roundup Trilogy which in volume one set itself up as a story of Ireland and the Irish Revolution, takes a surprising turn when the trilogy’s main character Henry Smart moves to America and becomes firmly ensconced in the Jazz Age. Moving to Chicago, he becomes the right hand man of none other than Louis Armstrong.